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2015 Liberal Party Platform

The Liberal Party was elected with a majority government on October 19,
2015. We've summarized much of the information from their platform,
hopefully addressing most or all of the tax-related points. See what legislative
proposals have already been introduced prior to a 2016 budget.

Personal and Corporate Income Tax

- reduce the middle income tax bracket rate from 22% to 20.5%
- create a new income tax bracket of 33% for taxable income over $200,000
per year
- cancel the Family Tax Cut
- no change to pension splitting for seniors
- cancel the education and textbook tax
credits, but maintain the tuition
tax credit
- immediately reinstate in full the tax credit for contributions made to
labour-sponsored funds
- increase the residency component of the Northern Residents Deduction by
33% to a maximum of $22 per day, and index the benefit for inflation (maximum
deduction of $8,000 for Northern Zone, $4,000 in Intermediate Zone)
- introduce new Teacher and Early Childhood Educator School Supply Tax
Benefit, a refundable tax credit that will apply to the purchase of up to $1,000
worth of school supplies each year, for a maximum credit of $150 per year.
- set a cap on how much can be claimed through the stock option deduction
- reduce the small
business corporate income tax rate to 9% from 11% (already planned), ensure
that Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation (CCPC) status is not used to reduce
personal income tax obligations for high-income earners rather than supporting
small businesses

Employment Insurance

- offer a 12-month break on Employment Insurance (EI) premiums to
encourage companies to hire young Canadians for permanent positions, and waive
employer premiums for all those between the ages of 18 and 24 who are hired into
a permanent position in 2016, 2017, or 2018
- reduce EI premiums from $1.88 to
$1.65 in 2017. The previous estimate for the 2017 rate, as announced in the
Federal
2015 budget, was 1.49%.
- introduce more flexible parental benefits (EI)
- make Compassionate Care Benefit (EI) more flexible and easier to access
- reverse 2012 EI reforms that force unemployed workers to move away from
their communities

Canada Pension Plan, Old Age Security and Guaranteed Income
Supplement

- enhance the Canada Pension Plan in order to increase CPP benefits
- restore eligibility age for Old Age Security (OAS) and
Guaranteed Income
Supplement (GIS) to 65
- increase GIS for single low-income seniors by 10%
- introduce a new Seniors Price Index to ensure that OAS and GIS benefits
keep up with seniors' actual rising costs

Students

- increase maximum Canada Student Grant for low-income students to $3,000
per year for full-time students, and to $1,800 per year for part-time students,
and increase the income thresholds for eligibility
- make student loan system more flexible to ensure that no graduate with
student loans will be required to make any repayment until they are earning at
least $25,000 per year. This will be done by changing the income
thresholds in the Repayment Assistance Plan for recent graduates.
- cancel the education and textbook tax
credits, but maintain the tuition
tax credit

Other

- remove GST on new capital investments in affordable rental housing
- restore the mandatory long-form census, which was replaced in
2011 by a voluntary National Household Survey, which covered most of the same
topics as the previous long-form census.
- require all Parliamentarians to disclose expenses in a common and
detailed manner, each quarter
- stop the plan to end door-to-door mail delivery in Canada
- create a simple, central, no-fee website for Canadians to make requests
about their own personal information held by the government. Should a
request take longer than 30 days to fulfill, government must provide a written
explanation for the delay to the applicant and the Privacy Commissioner.
Assuming this will replace the current Personal
Information Request Form.
- repeal Bill
C-377 (disclosure requirements for labour organizations) and Bill
C-525 Employees' Voting Rights Act re unions (certification and revocation -
bargaining agent)
- review Bill C-51
Anti-terrorism Act, 2015 and introduce new legislation that better balances our
collective security with our rights and freedoms
- legalize, regulate, and restrict access to marijuana
- reverse CBC budget cuts and invest $150 million in new annual funding
for CBC/Radio-Canada
- introduce a public safety officer compensation benefit to be paid to
families of fire fighters, police officers, and paramedics killed or permanently
disabled in the line of duty ($300,000 benefit)
- restore funding for Canada's four heavy urban search and rescue teams,
re-open the Maritime Rescue Sub-centre in St. John's, and the Kitsilano Coast
Guard Base in Vancouver
- in 2019/20, reduce the federal debt-to-GDP ratio to 27 percent and
balance the budget
- more, including immigration, refugees, infrastructure funding